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B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference

 
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zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.n
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PostPosted: Mon Mar 24, 2008 12:51 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

Hi,

We have been running for about 20 hours now chasing different problems. One
outstanding one is magnetic interference from the SD-20 / LR3 combination.
We have a TSO'd vertical card compass (and yes it is a southern hemisphere
model) mounted in the middle of the panel area (center/center). We are dual
alt / dual bus configuration.

When the field wire is connected to the SD-20 (lower connection) we get up
to 40 degree swing on the compass - it does vary in amount (from 20-40
degrees) based on direction - south seems the worst. Pulling the field
breaker causes it swings back about 30 degrees, but the regulator / alt are
still have an affect.

B&C are saying some swing is 'normal' - but 40 degrees - I'm struggling! I
can't calibrate that much out (best effort so far is +- 15 degrees).

I've tried changing the location / orientation of the regulator - no
difference. I've tried moving another wet compass around the panel /
cockpit - it looks like same problem (although a bit hard to tell).

I've tried running some grounded braid around the firewall forward side of
the field wire - no change. Same symptoms on ground, air, zero RPM and full
power. There may be a small movement (< 3 degrees) based on current draw
from SD-20. With SD-20 field disconnected and X-Feed in - no movement.

Questions:
a) Have others got this / solved this?
b) Any suggested methods of screening the SD-20?

Thanks,

Carl
--
Carl Morgan - ZK-VII - RV 7A
http://www.rvproject.gen.nz/
Checked by AVG.
15:03


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nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 3:17 am    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

At 09:44 AM 3/25/2008 +1300, you wrote:

Quote:

<zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.nz>

Hi,

We have been running for about 20 hours now chasing different problems. One
outstanding one is magnetic interference from the SD-20 / LR3 combination.
We have a TSO'd vertical card compass (and yes it is a southern hemisphere
model) mounted in the middle of the panel area (center/center). We are dual
alt / dual bus configuration.

When the field wire is connected to the SD-20 (lower connection) we get up
to 40 degree swing on the compass - it does vary in amount (from 20-40
degrees) based on direction - south seems the worst. Pulling the field
breaker causes it swings back about 30 degrees, but the regulator / alt are
still have an affect.

B&C are saying some swing is 'normal' - but 40 degrees - I'm struggling! I
can't calibrate that much out (best effort so far is +- 15 degrees).

I've tried changing the location / orientation of the regulator - no
difference. I've tried moving another wet compass around the panel /
cockpit - it looks like same problem (although a bit hard to tell).

I've tried running some grounded braid around the firewall forward side of
the field wire - no change. Same symptoms on ground, air, zero RPM and full
power. There may be a small movement (< 3 degrees) based on current draw
from SD-20. With SD-20 field disconnected and X-Feed in - no movement.

Questions:
a) Have others got this / solved this?
b) Any suggested methods of screening the SD-20?

Thanks,

Carl


The problem is magnetic, not electrical.
Had this problem on the Bonanza too. The SD-20
(as do most alternators) has a considerable
leakage of magnetic flux from the rotor winding.
This isn't a problem for most installations
where the alternator mounts on the front of
the engine.

Alternators hung on the rear of the engine
are much closer to the instrument panel and
more likely to be an issue with a panel
mounted compass.

In the Bonanza, we moved the compass off the
glareshield to a location on higher on the
windshield. Adding a magnetic shield around
the SD-20 is a pretty busy task. The shield
material would have to be magnetic and cover
the rear and perhaps the circumference of the
alternator. This has some issues with cooling,
wiring egress and labor to implement it.

The easiest fix is to increase distance between
the compass and the alternator. Magnetic
'radiation' is a weak propagator . . . a little
distance really helps.

Alternatively, an electronic compass with
a remote sensor out in a wing is the best
way to achieve the highest performance
in a magnetic direction indicator. The
case can be made that since you have
3 sources of DC power, reliability of
the electronic compass is assured. I would
also hope that you carry a hand-held GPS
in the flight bag too.

I'm not sure I'd bother to install a
whisky compass any more. Likelihood of
ever needing one these days is about nil.
Same thing happened to buggy whips. We
were fortunate not to be plagued by the
FHA (Federal Horsecart Administration)
when the transition occurred. Hmmmm . . .
maybe they didn't really go away . . .
they just morphed into radio antennas.

Let's be really clear about this condition.
This is NOT a downside checkmark on the blackboard
for the B&C SD-20. ALL alternators have a steel
shaft that runs through the device parallel
to the magnetic lines of force generated in
the field windings. See:

http://www.aeroelectric.com/Pictures/Alternators/Alternator_w_Internal_Fan2.gif

This mechanical feature insures that EVERY
alternator will present a strong external
magnetic field. It's a system integration problem
that seldom presents but has multiple solutions
for maintaining flight-system reliability. The
REAL problem is getting those-who-know-more-
about-airplanes-than-we-do to join us in
the 21st century.

Bob . . .


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zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.n
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 12:45 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

Hi Bob,

Removing the 'whiskey compass' could / will result in my aircraft being
grounded. I have been round the loop with the NZ CAA and the 'need' for a
traditional compass, I already have a GRT EFIS with magnetometer, IFR GPS
and still not enough. At the moment it is going to be an up cliff paperwork
struggle.

Removing the SD-20 is a 'better' option from their perspective, but with a
full FADEC I'm not comfortable with just dual battery, single alternator -
and having got to this point where the engine is running great (or too well)
removing the SD-20 isn't an option either. Distance changing is going to be
in the order of 1" difference, unless I mounted it in the baggage
compartment. What options can be used to reduce the magnetic impact - is it
a luck of the draw with the SD-20 - ie. they all vary abit? We are only
taking 3-4 amps under normal operations. I understand some interference
coming out, but what is 'too much'?

WRT:
Quote:
This is NOT a downside checkmark on the blackboard
for the B&C SD-20. ALL alternators have a steel
shaft that runs through the device parallel
to the magnetic lines of force generated in
the field windings.

My biggest complaint is there is NO indication or warnings about this
anywhere in the instruction / website information - I would have
reconsidered the panel layout with this information, as it is I'm fixed
without major rework and it is affecting my Autopilot backup and one of the
few instruments the regulator is specifically interested in....

How can I reduce this interference at the source - hopefully a small
reduction will be enough to get calibration within spec.

Thanks,

Carl
--
Carl Morgan - ZK-VII - RV 7A
http://www.rvproject.gen.nz/

[quote] --


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mprather(at)spro.net
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 3:07 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

Are _you_ concerned about the function of the whiskey compass? If not
(given the other equipment on board), do your best to come up with a
calibration card for it and call it good.

Side question.. I got the impression that your compass reads accurately
when the field is turned off on the SD-20. Can the SD-20 be used only
when your main alternator is off line? If so, the only time your compass
will have a problem is if the main alternator fails. I could live with
that..

Also, what's the wire routing of the output and field of the SD-20 (with
respect to the compass? Is it possible that the wire routing is
contributing to the B-field generated by the SD-20? Is the ground
following a different route than the field and output wires? I'm pretty
sure Bob's assessment of the cause of your headache was correct, but I
wonder if there might be additional factors...

In a different direction, you can get a remote compass from Century
Instruments:

http://www.trade-a-plane.com/dispads/0000769074.pdf

Kinda spendy at $500 for the kit.. And, I don't know if it actually
satisfies the requirement.
Regards,

Matt-

[quote]
<zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.nz>

Hi Bob,

Removing the 'whiskey compass' could / will result in my aircraft being
grounded. I have been round the loop with the NZ CAA and the 'need' for a
traditional compass, I already have a GRT EFIS with magnetometer, IFR GPS
and still not enough. At the moment it is going to be an up cliff
paperwork
struggle.

Removing the SD-20 is a 'better' option from their perspective, but with a
full FADEC I'm not comfortable with just dual battery, single alternator -
and having got to this point where the engine is running great (or too
well)
removing the SD-20 isn't an option either. Distance changing is going to
be
in the order of 1" difference, unless I mounted it in the baggage
compartment. What options can be used to reduce the magnetic impact - is
it
a luck of the draw with the SD-20 - ie. they all vary abit? We are only
taking 3-4 amps under normal operations. I understand some interference
coming out, but what is 'too much'?

WRT:
> This is NOT a downside checkmark on the blackboard
> for the B&C SD-20. ALL alternators have a steel
> shaft that runs through the device parallel
> to the magnetic lines of force generated in
> the field windings.

My biggest complaint is there is NO indication or warnings about this
anywhere in the instruction / website information - I would have
reconsidered the panel layout with this information, as it is I'm fixed
without major rework and it is affecting my Autopilot backup and one of
the
few instruments the regulator is specifically interested in....

How can I reduce this interference at the source - hopefully a small
reduction will be enough to get calibration within spec.

Thanks,

Carl
--
Carl Morgan - ZK-VII - RV 7A
http://www.rvproject.gen.nz/

> --


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zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.n
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 3:54 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

Hi Matt,

Thanks for the ideas, I'm really not that concerned about the whiskey
compass functionality - if I've lost all my other mag direction indicators -
the engine has stopped, so I don't really care about direction Wink However
the CAA so far is and the calibration card per regs has to be within 10
degrees Sad.

SD-20 off / disconnected - yes I think the compass reads right - but we are
dual bus (two independent active buses), not endurance / essential bus - so
both alts need to be running / working.

Wire routing - the B lead and field goes aft from the SD-20 to the firewall,
left across the top of the firewall, aft again through the firewall and back
to a mid location for the regulator which is on a tray between the forward
panel ribs (RV 7A Tipup).

Remote compass - it could yet be the option - but I don't like to even think
about the routing of the cables through the tunnel / spar / wing.....

Regards,

Carl
--
Carl Morgan - ZK-VII - RV 7A
http://www.rvproject.gen.nz/

[quote] --


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khorton01(at)rogers.com
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 5:21 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

There are type certificated aircraft where the whiskey compass is
only accurate in a very particular electrical system configuration.
For example, on the Cessna C550 (Citation II business jet), the
whiskey compass is only useable if both generators are OFF. This is
quite acceptable to the FAA, Transport Canada, and I presume the NZ CAA.

Given that you have an EFIS with a remote flux valve that acts as
your primary source of magnetic heading, you don't need the whiskey
compass to read accurately most of the time. I wonder if it might be
acceptable to put a placard by the whiskey compass that said "SD-20
Alternator must be OFF to use compass". Then make a compass
correction card that is only valid if the SD-20 is OFF.

Kevin Horton
On 25 Mar 2008, at 19:51, Carl Morgan wrote:
[quote]
vii(at)rvproject.gen.nz>

Hi Matt,

Thanks for the ideas, I'm really not that concerned about the whiskey
compass functionality - if I've lost all my other mag direction
indicators -
the engine has stopped, so I don't really care about direction Wink
However
the CAA so far is and the calibration card per regs has to be
within 10
degrees Sad.

SD-20 off / disconnected - yes I think the compass reads right -
but we are
dual bus (two independent active buses), not endurance / essential
bus - so
both alts need to be running / working.

Wire routing - the B lead and field goes aft from the SD-20 to the
firewall,
left across the top of the firewall, aft again through the firewall
and back
to a mid location for the regulator which is on a tray between the
forward
panel ribs (RV 7A Tipup).

Remote compass - it could yet be the option - but I don't like to
even think
about the routing of the cables through the tunnel / spar / wing.....

Regards,

Carl
--
Carl Morgan - ZK-VII - RV 7A
http://www.rvproject.gen.nz/

> --


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zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.n
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 6:06 pm    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

Very interesting - Thanks Kevin.... This could be a short term solution for
the paperwork battle....

Carl

PS: I wonder how close a C550 is to a glider with both generators OFF Wink

[quote] --


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nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 3:33 am    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

At 12:51 PM 3/26/2008 +1300, you wrote:

Quote:

<zk-vii(at)rvproject.gen.nz>

Hi Matt,

Thanks for the ideas, I'm really not that concerned about the whiskey
compass functionality - if I've lost all my other mag direction indicators -
the engine has stopped, so I don't really care about direction Wink However
the CAA so far is and the calibration card per regs has to be within 10
degrees Sad.

SD-20 off / disconnected - yes I think the compass reads right - but we are
dual bus (two independent active buses), not endurance / essential bus - so
both alts need to be running / working.

If you have a cross-feed, then just about every individual who knows-
more-about-airplanes-than-we-do will accept a fall back position for
dealing with failures that might present other limits as well.
Assuming that all other "normal" methods for pointing the nose in
the right direction are no longer available, then shutting the SD-20
OFF, closing the cross-feed contactor, reducing total loads to that
of the main alternator and flying with a now acceptable performance
from the antiquated pointing device is a perfectly valid 'plan-B'.
Quote:
Wire routing - the B lead and field goes aft from the SD-20 to the firewall,
left across the top of the firewall, aft again through the firewall and back
to a mid location for the regulator which is on a tray between the forward
panel ribs (RV 7A Tipup).

The B-lead comes into the cockpit? Where are your batteries? The
B-lead can and should be well away from the instrument panel and
tie to fat-wires through a small ANL or MAXI fuse. I presume that
you're seeing maximum effect with the engine at idle while doing
the Mexican hat-dance at the compass rose. These are the conditions
where current in the b-lead is least . . . perhaps even zero while
current through the field is maxed out. The regulator is hollering
down to the engine room for "more power Mr. Scott . . . I need
MORE power". Of course, at low engine RPM, the regulator isn't
going to get what it wants to see and field current and associated
external effects are at their maximums.
Quote:
Remote compass - it could yet be the option - but I don't like to even think
about the routing of the cables through the tunnel / spar / wing.....

Then consider the special ops protocols for getting the whisky
compass to live in the real world of a highly capable, failure
tolerant electrical system. Perhaps some day, those-who-know-
more-about-airplanes-than-we-do will allow us to relegate the
once venerable magnetic direction indicator to the function of
hood ornaments.

Bob . . .


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PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 3:52 am    Post subject: B&C SD-20 and magnetic interference Reply with quote

. . . a luck of the draw with the SD-20 - ie. they all vary abit? We
are only taking 3-4 amps under normal operations. I understand some
interference coming out, but what is 'too much'?

WRT:
"This is NOT a downside checkmark on the blackboard
for the B&C SD-20. ALL alternators have a steel
shaft that runs through the device parallel
to the magnetic lines of force generated in
the field windings."

My biggest complaint is there is NO indication or warnings about
this anywhere in the instruction / website information - I would have
reconsidered the panel layout with this information, as it is I'm
fixed without major rework and it is affecting my Autopilot backup and
one of the few instruments the regulator is specifically interested in....

How can I reduce this interference at the source - hopefully a small
reduction will be enough to get calibration within spec.

It wouldn't hurt to drop B&C a note suggesting that their
install literature be appropriately enhanced. But in their
defense, this is not a common occurrence . . . you COULD
be having a similar problem by routing some fat wire too
close to the compass . . . or some other system integration
problem like installing one of the older DC motor driven
turn indicators too close and having interference from
its internal magnets.

It's unfortunate that after all the work you've put
into the airplane (and being so VERY close to finished)
that this problem should become the longest pole in your
tent. Welcome to the real world of aviation products design
and qualification! 95% of my services to clients on the
TC side of the house right now involve chasing $100
rats from multi-million dollar airplanes . . . with
those-who-know-more-about-airplanes-than-we-do holding
the type certification hostage until the flight system
is pest-free.

A well considered and easily demonstrated low-risk
plan-B for making the compass readings fall within specs
is the no-hardware, no hammers-n-saws approach to
getting your machine blessed until it's legal to move
the "hood ornament" out onto the cowl.

Interestingly enough, I recall sometime in the past
seeing a compass installation that was on a bracket
just outside the windscreen. I think it was put there
to get outside the cage of a day-vfr, rag-n-tube
machine that was too badly magnetized to allow
calibration of the compass when installed in it's
normal position within the cockpit.

Bob . . .


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